It's Time To Ban All Government Use of Face Recognition, Says Digital Rights Group (fastcompany.com) 163
Fight for the Future, the digital rights advocacy group, is calling for a nationwide ban on government use of facial recognition. Fast Company reports: The group says the technology is just too dangerous to civil liberties to allow government agencies to use it, even with regulation. It launched a website where people can contact their legislators and urge them to support a ban. "Imagine if we could go back in time and prevent governments around the world from ever building nuclear or biological weapons. That's the moment in history we're in right now with facial recognition," said Evan Greer, deputy director of Fight for the Future, in a statement. "This surveillance technology poses such a profound threat to the future of human society and basic liberty that its dangers far outweigh any potential benefits. We don't need to regulate it, we need to ban it entirely."
Being for law and order and (Score:2, Interesting)
not a criminal personally I'm all for FR pretty much everywhere in public. I want every criminal act captured and prosecuted. Maybe that's just me, but I don't think so.
Re:Being for law and order and (Score:5, Insightful)
People have literally died for your position, and many of them innocent.
"You don't ban things just because they can be misused."
For government you absolutely do. The 1st is a perfect example of that. It's not that it can be misused, it is a historically, daily, and hourly proven fact that governments abuse power. Canada, UK, Saudi Arabia, Iran, France, Scotland, and North Korea all agree that people should not have freedom of speech. Isn't it nice to be able to lump so many "upstanding" and "dictatorial" governments all together like that?
When you give government power, you need to consider it as though you are giving that power to your worst enemy, because eventually your worst enemy will be elected in over you.
You take away power they do not need because abuse is going to happen. You only give government enough power to get its job done and never a single spec more. And you crucify everyone abusing that power with great vengeance to keep it minimized.
Now, add to the fact that video surveillance can now be edited to unbelievable degrees how can any reasonable person believe a single bit of evidence, video, audio, or otherwise that the government says they collected? Knowing that our government, every government, has already been caught far too many times to count lying, doctoring evidence, destroying evidence, withholding evidence, fabricating evidence.... hopefully you will experience being on the wrong side of a serious accusation and you will figure it out. You will learn how helpless you feel when a no name member of government thinks you are guilty before you are even arrested and judged by a court/jury.
It also worries me that for people like you, it really does take trains already hauling people away to the gas chambers before you can figure out something is wrong.
"It just seems too many people these days are ban happy. Anything they don't understand or are afraid of, they start calling for bans. It's a very short-sighted way to approach the world."
Yes, that statement is often true, but you are creating a false equivalency. You are equating peoples desire to ban things that is derived from their petty fear vs someone banning something a government is trying to do because of it's enormous abuse potential. These are hugely different situations you have casually lumped together.
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And you crucify everyone abusing that power with great vengeance to keep it minimized.
Yeah but you don't though do you, look at what the NSA, GCHQ and all their affiliates do or even Google and Facebook. You preach a nice sentiment but you fail to back it up with actions so it's nothing but toothless mumbling.
Now, add to the fact that video surveillance can now be edited to unbelievable degrees how can any reasonable person believe a single bit of evidence, video, audio, or otherwise that the government says they collected?
So what are you worried about then? "Damn the government with all their fake surveillance footage that nobody believes is real!!!"
Knowing that our government, every government, has already been caught far too many times to count lying, doctoring evidence, destroying evidence, withholding evidence, fabricating evidence....
And you preaching to "cruficy" them for these abuses and not actually doing anything.
It also worries me that for people like you, it really does take trains already hauling people away to the gas chambers before you can figure out something is wrong.
Does it matter? You're not doing anything about it now and if your hypot
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You left America off your list of countries. As America has actually executed people for speech in the latter half of the 20th century (Talking about how to build a nuke), they can be listed with N. Korea and Saudi Arabia.
The 1st is pretty simple, yet Congress has passed lots of laws limiting speech, often revolving around national defence or morals. Try engaging in certain types of speech with an Iranian resident for example.
All it takes in America to ban speech is the Supreme Court to decide something is
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Canada, UK, Saudi Arabia, Iran, France, Scotland, and North Korea all agree that people should not have freedom of speech.
Could you please point out where Canada, UK and France (Scotland is part of the UK by the way) "agree that people should not have freedom of speech".
A simple search would show you that Canada does have a freedom of speech statute in their charter of rights:
"Freedom of expression in Canada is protected as a "fundamental freedom" by Section 2 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms" [wikipedia.org]
UK and France also have freedom of speech as part of their respective bills of right:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
http [wikipedia.org]
Re:Being for law and order and (Score:5, Interesting)
You ban things because you can be almost entirely sure that they will be misused. Just look at how many times law enforcement officers have gotten into trouble for accessing things like the DMV database illegally to find some cute girl they saw getting into a car at the mall.
When the likelihood is near 100% that a system will be abused you either make it illegal or put in so many protections to keep it from being abused that it will be useless.
The US is the land of the free and home of the brave. That doesn't mention "safe" anywhere in it. Human nature proves beyond any doubt that we will never be safe all the time in everything we do. There is no technology now or in the future that will guarantee our safety and still allow us any kind of freedom. What you are talking about is a police state and people will still suffer from abuse from the state but almost everyone who isn't poor will not have to deal with that because that is how a police state works. You keep your head down and don't be poor and you will be fine.
If you think there will be facial recognition and there won't be a permanent record of everywhere you go and everything you do then you are the most foolish person to ever draw a breath on this planet. If you have a car newer than 2005 with factory gps and internet capability or you carry around a phone there is absolutely already a permanent record of everything you do and everywhere you go. The company you bought your car from keeps those records and won't tell anyone how long they keep them for. Phone companies say they don't keep records but also wont admit how long it stays in their system before being deleted. Not answering is a way of saying "it stays there forever."
This is the age of "big data" and storage is dirt fucking cheap compared to the money these companies get from using all the data they collect about you. Governments don't need to care about a big budget because with all the money the US spends every year they could hide what it costs to store all the data from your car and phone as an inexpensive line item on a purchase for any government agency and we would never know.
We already have enough issues with trying to secure our personal information and maintain some little bit of privacy now. Facial recognition systems would compound these beyond belief and would be overcome with abuse. A city administrator running a search for his wife and spying on what she is doing. A police officer searching for his ex girlfriend who left him because he was abusive. Someone with a friend who has access and pays them to find someone they have a grudge against.
Unless and until they can find a way to guarantee that the system won't be abused it shouldn't be allowed anywhere in the US. Technology has opened a lot of doors but this is one that we need to slam shut right now. I'm a law abiding citizen and don't have anything to fear but that doesn't mean I want a computer looking at every camera in the city and tracking and recording everywhere I go. I don't want a system where someone could have a photo of me and search the system to see where I am at the moment or where I was.
Anyway since facial recognition systems all over the world are wrong over 80% of the time right now why don't we just let this technology advance to where it is right 99.99% of the time and then we can undo the laws banning it if we need to. Even in test systems in a controlled environment where they have as few as a few hundred photos in the database they get it wrong more than 60% of the time or simply can't identify the person in the image they are given. Somehow you think introducing a few hundred thousand or even millions of people into these systems and putting them up operating in public will do anything but cause innocent people trouble. Yep, you are a damned fool.
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"Just look at how many times law enforcement officers have gotten into trouble for accessing things like the DMV database illegally to find some cute girl they saw getting into a car at the mall."
I'm more concerned about them killing black people with the gun they got to protect themselves.
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Thats pretty fucking racist, what about all the other people that get shot by cops? Fuck them right, they deserved it. But the black person dies unjustly...
Think before you type.
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Thats pretty fucking racist, what about all the other people that get shot by cops? Fuck them right, they deserved it. But the black person dies unjustly...
Think before you type.
Exactly. We have a few cases that involve cops (both black and white but mostly white) shooting blacks for no sane reason, but considering the number of incidents in general encountered by law enforcement officers daily, this number is microscopic, and saying there is a general trend is basically racist.
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There are no small number of gun rights opponents who would argue a similar point about the tools that they are opposed to.
The solution, as with guns, is to make laws that ensure that abusive behavior is illegal and do what you can to try to enforce that, rather than banning the use of a tool completely
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People should not have their every move tracked and logged.
Just wait for the 5G revolution and always tracked autonomous and semi-autonomous vehicles. And pedestrians, since their cell phones will be used to detect their movements by deci- and centimeter for road safety, security and commercial purposes. Facial recognition is absolutely nothing compared to the coming constant tracking around the corners, through walls and medows, everywhere we go first within suburbia and soon after that in the country-side. People are building it right now, without any vocalized c
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Unconstitutional (Score:1, Informative)
4th Amendment:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
5th Amendment:
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases ari
Re: Unconstitutional (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey look, a random internet person does not know how to read.
America being a surveillance state is a massive violation of the Constitution. While true your face in public itself being recorded may not be a violation. Taking the steps to match that photo up with your personal information to discover you you are without a warrant is a violation without a doubt and there have been many cases even all the way up to the supreme court that has said so.
Your locations and movements can be tracked and recorded. It can be used to falsely implicate you in a crime you didn't even know occurred. It can be hacked by bad actors and used to blackmail you, steal your identity, or someone we have not though of yet.
Wouldn't it be nice for a rapist police officer or criminal to track down a woman's movements to locate the best place to rape them without being caught? And since it's it constantly happening without any warrants how are we going to even know? So many will be happening it will be hard to discover. There are tons of stories just like this already in the news. There are tons of stories of hackers gaining access to information governments are barely even attempting to protect.
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Prosecutor: Mr. Smith the cities facial recognition system flagged you walking downtown near 8th street and Vine at about 11:30 pm that night, is that correct?
Mr. Smith: Yes, I was walking home from dinner with some friends.
Prosecutor: You were the only person seen on video anywhere near the scene of the murder during the time it occurred. Since nobody else was seen by the more than 15 cameras in the blocks around that area for at least 15 minutes either side of the time of the murder how can you claim inno
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To look at the other side of the coin, the same thing can also completely vindicate you.
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I'm not dismissing the validity of the point that such tracking could also implicate you where you had nothing to do with it, but it seems fairly obvious that everyone who they could easily see was *NOT* in the area at the time of crime would be vindicated. The latter grou
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Been pictures on IDs for a longtime. Look at your Drivers License.
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I am not here to help you pass 5th grade reading comprehension. If you require a detailed explanation of what is obviously easy for you to look up yourself then you probably need more help than I can assist you with here.
https://www.dictionary.com/bro... [dictionary.com]
7. Often tons. Informal. a great quantity; a lot: a ton of jokes; tons of wedding presents.
Hopefully you learned something today, be sure to run home and tell your daddy you went to school today and what you learned!
Re: Unconstitutional (Score:2)
What you're advocating for is essentially a ban on looking at people.
Exactly.
The issue is the efficiency of Facial Recognition. It's perfectly fine to take pictures of people, put them in a binder [youtube.com], and have a witness or victim flip thru them to find their attacker - no one is arguing against photo lineups or mug books, are they?
This is like the argument against license plate readers... It's OK for a Sargent to tell police officers to 'keep an eye out' for a specific license plate, or to send an alert to every cellphone to look for a particular vehicle, but set up a camera on
Re: Unconstitutional (Score:4)
You just explained the difference between looking for somebody already accused of or being a person of interest, and vacuuming every identity in the country up into a database "for the lulz"...
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I note 4 doesn't mention being secure in public areas. Not sure why you even mention 5.
Re: Unconstitutional (Score:1)
Because "Trump!"
Re: Being for law and order and (Score:5, Interesting)
Wow, so only in the year 2019 are we able to finally put people into jail? How did we make it so far?
There is a genuine Cost vs Benefit to consider here.
The cost of our liberty is too much for the very low benefit of putting innocent people into jail. Because that is what is going to happen... more innocents going to jail than actual criminals. Just like all the people that go to jail because field drug tests say donut glaze is meth and off to jail they go. The same thing will happen here, police and over zealous prosecutors will threaten people with all sorts of charges if they don't take a plea deal and cop to being guilty.
You have a very ugly bias where you seem to think only criminals are being arrested. You need to check out the innocence project. You are probably too stupid to understand it, but you generally just approved of the police rounding up innocents and arresting them based on worthless evidence. Kinda like being able to beat down black folks for being black on a Friday night.
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The British quartered troops in people's homes in order to keep an eye on them, not because they could not house the troops themselves.
If you have a "smart" TV or an Alexa or similar, you effectively *do* have essentially the same thing as having government agents (like troops or police) in your home monitoring all you do and say.
Many if not most of these companies that operate these devices will hand over an
Re: Being for law and order and (Score:2)
And since the average American unwittingly commits 3 felonies a day, every day....
"Felonies"?
I don't care what Harvey Silverglate says, "You, sir, are a fucking idiot."
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And since the average American unwittingly commits 3 felonies a day, every day....
"Felonies"?
I don't care what Harvey Silverglate says, "You, sir, are a fucking idiot."
I most certainly doubt that most people in any civilized country would be committing felonies on a daily basis, let alone 3. Misdemeanors perhaps but nobody would be using facial recognition to issue tickets for jaywalking or similar.
Re: Being for law and order and (Score:2)
The "statistic" likely comes from the author I cited previously, but the author's point is being Mis-applied. The authors point was that the way US federal regulations are typically written seemingly minor transgressions can be made into 'federal cases', as it were.
Not that those felonies are typically prosecuted or even detected.
You will not be sent to 'pound younin the ass' federal prison for having three 'random' wild bird feathers in your possession. First off, I doubt it is a crime, at any level, to po
You are a criminal. Yes you are. (Score:5, Insightful)
not a criminal personally I'm all for FR pretty much everywhere in public. I want every criminal act captured and prosecuted. Maybe that's just me, but I don't think so.
Yes you are a criminal. So is everyone else including me. The laws are written that way on purpose. I absolutely guarantee you violate multiple laws every single day of your life. Some intentionally (speeding just a little bit) and some not intentionally. Many you aren't even aware they are a law. So no, you don't want every criminal act captured and prosecuted. That's not a world ANY of us want to live in. I want to live in a world where reason plays a role in the rule of law. There are very few laws that perfectly capture every possible contingency and situation. Many times they don't even matter at all.
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In the UK the police are supposed to use their discretion when enforcing the law. They can and regularly do ignore crimes in the interest of keeping the peace and the public good.
The danger becomes that if everything is recorded and searchable by face, the moment law enforcement does decide to lean on you they have a huge archive of historic crimes to throw at you. I understand that this kind of "inflation" is common in the US, where they threaten you with decades in jail in order to encourage you to accept
Plea bargins (Score:2)
In the UK the police are supposed to use their discretion when enforcing the law. They can and regularly do ignore crimes in the interest of keeping the peace and the public good.
That's true everywhere. It would be physically, economically, and practically impossible for every law to be enforced to the letter of the law every time. In very practical terms, police and judiciary need a fair amount of discretion in when NOT to apply the law, particularly for minor offenses. Yes this is not an easy thing to do sometimes but they can only do a certain amount and so some "crimes" will necessarily need to be overlooked provided they aren't particularly serious. (yes this discretion can
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Considering you only named a single law that many people might violate every day, but not everyone does (leaving aside that not everyone even drives every day), I'm calling complete bullshit on this claim.
Yeah, you could probably name quite a number of laws that many people are guilty of at one time or another (such as speeding), but that's still quite
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Considering you only named a single law that many people might violate every day, but not everyone does (leaving aside that not everyone even drives every day), I'm calling complete bullshit on this claim.
I only named a single law because it was an illustrative example and making a complete catalog of them is something you can easily do yourself. 20 seconds on google would have shown you that my claim is unquestionably true [businessinsider.com]. Here are just a few examples of laws routinely broken by a big percentage of the population (exact legality varies by jurisdiction). If you are driving you almost certainly have broken at least one traffic law every time you get behind the wheel.
1) Connecting to an unsecured Wifi netw
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Moving the goalposts, are we?
"almost certainly" is actually a far cry from "absolutely guarantee". Had you used those words in the first place, I don't think I would have said anything.it.
But of course, Google is far from the font of all human wisdom, and many of the items you mentioned are not even actually illegal, or at least would vary greatly depending on jurisdiction.
While it's quite
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"no, you don't want every criminal act captured and prosecuted."
Yes, I do. But I want them to start with the wealthiest people and work their way down, not start with the poorest people and then not bother to work their way up. If rich people were getting busted for things that shouldn't be crimes, then they'd exert their influence to eliminate those laws. But those laws aren't for them, they're for us. Instead of getting rid of bad laws, they just lobby for additional selective enforcement.
That last is the
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not a criminal personally I'm all for FR pretty much everywhere in public. I want every criminal act captured and prosecuted. Maybe that's just me, but I don't think so.
I fully agree -- an outright ban seems unreasonable as FR can be an awesome tool to help with the more unbiased identification of people and fair enforcement of laws. My recommendation would be establishing a baseline regulation on how the government is allowed to utilize facial recognition and data gained from the use of facial recogn
Hmmmm (Score:1)
Trying to remember the last time technology was kicked to the side because of something silly like basic liberties. Nope, got nothing.
Not gonna happen (Score:3, Insightful)
Cat's out of the bag. Get over it.
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Good thing they did not have that same mentality in 1942.
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Yes. As soon as it can be done, it will. I like the idea of making sure the “enforcers” have less privacy than the general public, but that is equally impractical.
The problem that we have seen time and time again is selective enforcement of rules based on “enemies” doesn’t work, nor does perfect enforcement of the law (as it exists). You have to adapt the laws to ensure the fascist future is kept in check.
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It's happened before. When DNA evidence first became available the British police abused it a lot. In fact forensic evidence in general tends to be abused when it is new. Over time individual defendants find flaws in it and establish precedent, and the forensic evidence gets weaker and maybe some victims of the police get released.
The police's DNA database is an on-going battle. At first it was impossible to get off it, now innocent people at least can have their records erased. At one point they were doing
Ban ALL Government Use???? (Score:3)
Basic human rights (Score:2)
It sounds unlikely, but most western governments have signed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. So yes, treating everybody like a criminal is already forbidden, and violates the right to privacy as well.
As a side note, facial recognition also encourages corruption. The politicians pushing facial recognition naturally do not want the system to work against themselves. I really have a hard time believing that any government-mandated facial recognition system in use today abides the rule that everyone
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Or maybe take the sensible approach and allow limited, regulated use in line with the established science.
Fingerprints, for example, are nothing like they are depicted on CSI. You don't get a perfect match where the two samples overlay perfectly on screen. You get a match probability, and in fact the ultimate decision is often subjective.
The police used to get away with having their "expert" testify that the fingerprints matched, but eventually defendants realized they could pay their own expert to say that
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How? (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you really think your representatives at every level of government will pass something like that? They won't. And even if they did, we're a couple years away from facial recognition being so ubiquitous that even small children will be using it routinely. Government will just get someone else to use it for them and give them the answers.
If you can pass a ban on facial recognition, you can reform the parts of the government you don't trust — so there will be no need to ban them from using facial recognition. If you can't reform or eliminate untrustworthy government, you won't be able to keep them from using facial recognition, ban or no ban.
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I know. They will just do it anyway and call themselves with "an anonymous tip". If you can't trust them with facial recognition technology, you can't trust them to obey a law banning them from using facial recognition technology.
Nah (Score:5, Insightful)
You cannot stop progress. Especially the progress which allows to spy on us while staying in the shadows.
Looks like wearing a mask or camouflage in public places will soon become a necessity. 1984 cannot come soon enough.
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That's already illegal in many parts of the US. The KKK and Antifa ruined it for everyone.
It is illegal in Denmark too, but that is to harrass Muslim woman. Making a law that forbade all face covering, was the only way to make a constitutionally legal ban on Burqas.
Decades too late. (Score:2)
What they fail to realize is that facial recognition is been in use by the U.S. government for literally decades. It's not a perfect tool but it is helpful.
If they had come up with this proposal in the early '90s, it might have had a chance. Right now they will simply be laughed at.
Reasonable... (Score:3)
An argument that calls for a complete ban will never fly. Trying to equate FR to nuclear weapons will result in claims of hyperbole and exaggeration, which will scuttle the demands from the start.
The only place the argument will sound reasonable is when it is preached to the choir. If you have any other definition of "unreasonable" than "any and all", you're not going to be persuaded at all.
How about...no. (Score:2)
Knowing who's who is a requirement of maintaining the conditions necessary for physical security given that one out of every hundred or so people is batshit crazy and one out of every couple dozen of those are both crazy and violent. You want to keep tabs on the crazy and violent and you want the not-yet-violent crazies and borderline crazies to know that
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Governments are obligated to maintain the conditions necessary for physical security in the territory over which they are empowered to exercise authority.
Actually, no.
It sounds good, and is the sort of thing that authority loves to hear, but the courts have decided that this is not actually the case. Authority would love you to believe this sort of thing, as this misconception is what elects country sherrifs, judges, mayors ect. AND allows the adoption of ever more creepy levels of invasive technology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
In a 4-3 decision, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals affirmed the trial courts' dismissal of the complaints against th
A bit late for that (Score:3)
Once it made it to the Super Bowl, it essentially became a permanent fixture in the U.S. It's not going anywhere. You might regulate it, but ban it outright? It's not gonna happen.
Pick your battles. (Score:4, Insightful)
Soon, the location of every police officer and government official in any given city will be publicly accessible with a smartphone.
We will have this conversation again.
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Soon, the location of every police officer and government official in any given city will be publicly accessible with a smartphone.
So police will just start wearing helmets with darkened face shields all the time. You'll be able to tell where the police are, but not who they are, and their facelessness will create even more distance between law enforcement and the people, and more aggressive police behavior.
That's a bad direction for this battle to take.
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Your missing the point. Nobody cares what the cops name is, but where he (and all his little friends) happen to be, at any given time, is very valuable information.
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So police will just start wearing helmets with darkened face shields all the time.
and while we're at it, they should make them also judge and excutioner all in one!
Pro (Score:2)
Better passport control.
The ability to detect illegal immigrant using sanctuary city photo ID.
Like finger prints, voice prints, IMSI-catcher tech, police malware, DNA - facial recognition will be a powerful new tool to track criminals and illegal immigrant.
Need a job? Get a bank account. Want to set up a bank account/have a job pay into a bank account? Facial recognition time.
Drive/bus/subway/port/rail in any part of the USA and total expe
Never Ban It ! (Score:1)
Wrong Solution... (Score:1)
At this point, banning facial recognition would be like banning encryption.... It's just not going to work. The technology has already been integrated into society, both in the public and private sectors.
A much more realistic solution is state/federal regulation that requires a warrant prior to identifying someone with FR during an investigation. We also need regulation that clearly states when and where facial recognition can be used.
Ha ha ha no. (Score:2)
"Imagine if we could go back in time and prevent governments around the world from ever building nuclear or biological weapons."
Then someone other than a government would do it, and either become the world's premier terrorist, or in effect, a government.
"That's the moment in history we're in right now with facial recognition"
No, kid. No we aren't. That cat not only came out of the bag already, it ripped the bag into tiny little shreds all over the living room. What a noob.
Closed vs. public spaces (Score:2)
I think the issue is what facial recognition is going to be used for. As a replacement for policemen's and security guards' manual work: in most cases, I would say yes. To detect known criminals at sensitive places, such as sporting events, airports, government: absolutely, this is a valid use.
But for authorities to identify and track everyone in public places: city streets and squares, public transit etc: Hell no!
For corporations to identify and track everyone on shopping streets and malls, like a real-wo
It's not just facial recognition (Score:2)
There are lots of ways to identify someone passively. Do it from their face. Or gait analysis. Or their voice. Or their retina. With a telephoto lens you can get a picture of their fingerprints from across the street.
The mistake here is focusing on the technology instead of the uses of the technology. They really should be trying to ban passive surveillance that identifies people in bulk who aren't suspected of any crime. If instead you ban one technology for doing that, they'll just move to another
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> Instead, we should improve society to a state where the new tech can't be misused.
Haha. Good luck with that!
ANY technology can be mis-used. Technology is NOT the problem NOR the solution for morality or ethic's dilemmas. Science, by definition is amoral.
--
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